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Ah.
Oh well, there are more beaches, and the house comes with a pool, so it's not to bad.
We even have an extra unused room in the house. And we're taking turns cooking, so smoked salmon is bound to happen, with pasta, pesto and pine nuts.
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How long will you be there?
You seem to be in the middle distance between Florence and Rome (both will take 2h+ to get there), so if planning day trips it might be too far.
With kids that young, your options for things to do will be limited.
If adults can share babysitting time, then the adults not on duty can probably go visit wineries and olive oil and other product producers.
You can also go to the beaches.
I'd rather be phishing!
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We'll be there for two weeks.
And the house comes with a pool.
In all honesty, we're really looking to relax most of the time, but all of those things you've mentioned is on our list to do.
Rome we intend to do without the kids though.
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Jörgen Andersson wrote: We're bringing children with us aged 2,3,4,5
And you call this a vacation?!?
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Hi,
I have been waiting for Dilbert to be funny for as long as it's been in print. Same now if not worse with Commit Strip.
I just come away with meh.
I think our industry is either YAY it's working or Damn it's still not. Either the people around us or the projects we are on. Neither of which are particularly humorous unless you are such a noob humanoid that breaking down others is funny.
Am I alone in this?
:Ron
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Yup.
Will Rogers never met me.
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Your point? Refuted[^]
veni bibi saltavi
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This one[^] should be in the FAQs for the QA section.
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I use that Bobby Tables reference a lot with teams when talking about defensive programming ideas. I find myself surprised how few people have come across it.
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Ron Anders wrote: I have been waiting for Dilbert to be funny You have to have a sense of humor to understand Dilbert.
He cracks me up. It's so real to life. He has dry humor, I like it.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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RyanDev wrote: You have to have a sense of humor to understand Dilbert. Here Here.
I worked in an office with a Pointy Haired Like manager,
and a guy who WAS TOTALLY WALLY. While some of the humor is a
little bizzare, I find I totally relate to it. My daughter is Alice.
So much so, that this Halloween, we are doing it Dilbert Themed.
I also think it is "irony" based humor. Just look at the "Watch that predicts when
people will die in a few minutes", and the companies decision to use Scare Tactic ads
(that confuse the users into thinking they may die). Ironic. Almost Realistically sad.
And funny because you know the watch will fail because the business can't figure out how
to get the ads to make revenue. (Truth portion was that good engineering can be undermined
by bad companies. Xerox and the Mouse, GUI, etc.)
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RyanDev wrote: Ron Anders wrote: I have been waiting for Dilbert to be funny You have to have a sense of humor to understand Dilbert.
A sense of humor and a job. In my 20s, my friends would look through my Dilbert and complain that they just weren't funny. Then one of them got a real job (ie, not cleaning pools or making pizzas) and suddenly they started to understand Dilbert and why it's funny.
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I don't think they are meant to be always "hahahaha" funny
Sometimes you simply smile, or nod, or weep, or say, "yeah, that's life" ...
I'd rather be phishing!
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Are there any comic strips that are funny anymore? Either my sense of humor has been dulled by the years or the comic strips used to actually contain comedy which they don't anymore. I remember as a kid, enjoying all of the Sunday paper comic strips...except for Doonsbury, which I never understood.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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Have you seen: http://smbc-comics.com/[^]
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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kmoorevs wrote: Are there any comic strips that are funny anymore?
Define the parameters of 'funny'!
In general I think comic strips have always been intended to be 'wry' rather than laugh-out-loud funny. If you did indeed find them 'funny' in the past (and one must always beware of golden age memory syndrome) it may say more about the immaturity of your sense of humour then than the dullness of it now.
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Close to home (less of a daily hit than before) but funny to me.
Most of the tech cartoons poke arrogant fun at the lesser informed which to me is not funny but a sad commentary.
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We get older and the jokes aren't new (to us) anymore, so they stop being funny. I noticed that as I matured, the other comics got less funny and Doonsbury got funnier.
We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.
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Apparently.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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They're just the same as comedy TV series, if you run them long enough it'll eventually get stale, then you need some new blood.
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How about:
The Help Desk at www.eviscerati.org/comics.
He hasn't updated in months, but you can just start at the beginning.
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well, i think the wally parts is worth reading, i love his procastination behaviour
#region(start signature)
Life's like a nose, you've got to get out of it whats in it!
#endregion
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Possibly your English is not advanced enough to appreciate it; I don't mean this as a slight, just an observation based on my own experience. When I read "Tortilla Flat" in its original and my native language, English, I thought it was the funniest thing since Twain. When I recently re-read it in Spanish (which I understand pretty well, but not at a native speaker level), it was not nearly as funny.
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